In this paper, a case-supported principle-based behavior paradigm is proposed to help ensure ethical behavior of autonomous machines. We argue that ethically significant behavior of autonomous systems should be guided by explicit ethical principles determined through a consensus of ethicists. Such a consensus is likely to emerge in many areas in which autonomous systems are apt to be deployed and for the actions they are liable to undertake. We believe that this is the case since we are more likely to agree on how machines ought to treat us than on how human beings ought to treat one another. Given such a consensus, particular cases of ethical dilemmas where ethicists agree on the ethically relevant features and the right course of action can be used to help discover principles that balance these features when they are in conflict. Such principles not only help ensure ethical behavior of complex and dynamic systems but also can serve as a basis for justification of this behavior. The requirements, methods, implementation, and evaluation components of the paradigm are detailed as well as its instantiation in both a simulated and real robot functioning in the domain of eldercare.

For many service robots, reactivity to changes in their surroundings is a must. However, developing software suitable for dynamic environments is difficult. Existing robotic middleware allows engineers to design behavior graphs by organizing communication between components. But because these graphs are structurally inflexible, they hardly support the development of complex reactive behavior. To address this limitation, we propose Playful, a software platform that applies reactive programming to the specification of robotic behavior.

We propose a method for instance-level segmentation that uses RGB-D data as input and provides detailed information about the location, geometry and number of {\em individual\/} objects in the scene. This level of understanding is fundamental for autonomous robots. It enables safe and robust decision-making under the large uncertainty of the real-world. In our model, we propose to use the first and second order moments of the object occupancy function to represent an object instance. We train an hourglass Deep Neural Network (DNN) where each pixel in the output votes for the 3D position of the corresponding object center and for the object's size and pose. The final instance segmentation is achieved through clustering in the space of moments. The object-centric training loss is defined on the output of the clustering. Our method outperforms the state-of-the-art instance segmentation method on our synthesized dataset. We show that our method generalizes well on real-world data achieving visually better segmentation results.

Grasping objects under uncertainty remains an open problem in robotics research. This uncertainty is often due to noisy or partial observations of the object pose or shape. To enable a robot to react appropriately to unforeseen effects, it is crucial that it continuously takes sensor feedback into account. While visual feedback is important for inferring a grasp pose and reaching for an object, contact feedback offers valuable information during manipulation and grasp acquisition. In this paper, we use model-free deep reinforcement learning to synthesize control policies that exploit contact sensing to generate robust grasping under uncertainty. We demonstrate our approach on a multi-fingered hand that exhibits more complex finger coordination than the commonly used two- fingered grippers. We conduct extensive experiments in order to assess the performance of the learned policies, with and without contact sensing. While it is possible to learn grasping policies without contact sensing, our results suggest that contact feedback allows for a significant improvement of grasping robustness under object pose uncertainty and for objects with a complex shape.

We address the challenging problem of robotic grasping and manipulation in the presence of uncertainty. This uncertainty is due to noisy sensing, inaccurate models and hard-to-predict environment dynamics. Our approach emphasizes the importance of continuous, real-time perception and its tight integration with reactive motion generation methods. We present a fully integrated system where real-time object and robot tracking as well as ambient world modeling provides the necessary input to feedback controllers and continuous motion optimizers. Specifically, they provide attractive and repulsive potentials based on which the controllers and motion optimizer can online compute movement policies at different time intervals. We extensively evaluate the proposed system on a real robotic platform in four scenarios that exhibit either challenging workspace geometry or a dynamic environment. We compare the proposed integrated system with a more traditional sense-plan-act approach that is still widely used. In 333 experiments, we show the robustness and accuracy of the proposed system.

One of the most basic skills a robot should possess is predicting the effect of physical interactions with objects in the environment. This enables optimal action selection to reach a certain goal state. Traditionally, dynamics are approximated by physics-based analytical models. These models rely on specific state representations that may be hard to obtain from raw sensory data, especially if no knowledge of the object shape is assumed. More recently, we have seen learning approaches that can predict the effect of complex physical interactions directly from sensory input. It is however an open question how far these models generalize beyond their training data. In this work, we investigate the advantages and limitations of neural network based learning approaches for predicting the effects of actions based on sensory input and show how analytical and learned models can be combined to leverage the best of both worlds. As physical interaction task, we use planar pushing, for which there exists a well-known analytical model and a large
real-world dataset. We propose to use a convolutional neural network to convert raw depth images or organized point clouds into a suitable representation for the analytical model and compare this approach to using neural networks for both, perception and prediction.
A systematic evaluation of the proposed approach on a very large real-world dataset shows two
main advantages of the hybrid architecture. Compared to a pure neural network, it significantly (i) reduces required training data and (ii) improves generalization to novel physical interaction.

This paper presents work on vision based robotic grasping. The proposed method adopts a learning framework where prototypical grasping points are learnt from several examples and then used on novel objects. For representation purposes, we apply the concept of shape context and for learning we use a supervised learning approach in which the classifier is trained with labelled synthetic images. We evaluate and compare the performance of linear and non-linear classifiers. Our results show that a combination of a descriptor based on shape context with a non-linear classification algorithm leads to a stable detection of grasping points for a variety of objects.

Robot learning methods which allow au- tonomous robots to adapt to novel situations have been a long standing vision of robotics, artificial intelligence, and cognitive sciences. However, to date, learning techniques have yet to ful- fill this promise as only few methods manage to scale into the high-dimensional domains of manipulator robotics, or even the new upcoming trend of humanoid robotics. If possible, scaling was usually only achieved in precisely pre-structured domains. In this paper, we investigate the ingredients for a general ap- proach policy learning with the goal of an application to motor skill refinement in order to get one step closer towards human- like performance. For doing so, we study two major components for such an approach, i. e., firstly, we study policy learning algo- rithms which can be applied in the general setting of motor skill learning, and, secondly, we study a theoretically well-founded general approach to representing the required control structu- res for task representation and execution.

For complex robots such as humanoids, model-based control is highly beneficial for accurate tracking
while keeping negative feedback gains low for compliance. However, in such multi degree-of-freedom
lightweight systems, conventional identification of rigid body dynamics models using CAD data and
actuator models is inaccurate due to unknown nonlinear robot dynamic effects. An alternative method
is data-driven parameter estimation, but significant noise in measured and inferred variables affects it
adversely. Moreover, standard estimation procedures may give physically inconsistent results due to
unmodeled nonlinearities or insufficiently rich data. This paper addresses these problems, proposing
a Bayesian system identification technique for linear or piecewise linear systems. Inspired by Factor
Analysis regression, we develop a computationally efficient variational Bayesian regression algorithm
that is robust to ill-conditioned data, automatically detects relevant features, and identifies input and
output noise. We evaluate our approach on rigid body parameter estimation for various robotic systems,
achieving an error of up to three times lower than other state-of-the-art machine learning methods.

In this work we present the ﬁrst constrained stochastic op-
timal feedback controller applied to a fully nonlinear, tendon
driven index ﬁnger model. Our model also takes into account an
extensor mechanism, and muscle force-length and force-velocity
properties. We show this feedback controller is robust to noise
and perturbations to the dynamics, while successfully handling
the nonlinearities and high dimensionality of the system. By ex-
tending prior methods, we are able to approximate physiological
realism by ensuring positivity of neural commands and tendon
tensions at all timesthus can, for the ﬁrst time, use the optimal control framework
to predict biologically plausible tendon tensions for a nonlinear
neuromuscular ﬁnger model.
METHODS
1 Muscle Model
The rigid-body triple pendulum ﬁnger model with slightly
viscous joints is actuated by Hill-type muscle models. Joint
torques are generated by the seven muscles of the index ﬁn-

We present a novel algorithm for efficient learning and feature selection in high-
dimensional regression problems. We arrive at this model through a modification of
the standard regression model, enabling us to derive a probabilistic version of the
well-known statistical regression technique of backfitting. Using the Expectation-
Maximization algorithm, along with variational approximation methods to overcome
intractability, we extend our algorithm to include automatic relevance detection
of the input features. This Variational Bayesian Least Squares (VBLS) approach
retains its simplicity as a linear model, but offers a novel statistically robust â??black-
boxâ? approach to generalized linear regression with high-dimensional inputs. It can
be easily extended to nonlinear regression and classification problems. In particular,
we derive the framework of sparse Bayesian learning, e.g., the Relevance Vector
Machine, with VBLS at its core, offering significant computational and robustness
advantages for this class of methods. We evaluate our algorithm on synthetic and
neurophysiological data sets, as well as on standard regression and classification
benchmark data sets, comparing it with other competitive statistical approaches
and demonstrating its suitability as a drop-in replacement for other generalized
linear regression techniques.

In the proceedings of American Control Conference (ACC 2010) , 2010, clmc (article)

Abstract

We present a generalization of the classic Differential Dynamic Programming algorithm. We assume the existence of state- and control-dependent process noise, and proceed to derive the second-order expansion of the cost-to-go. Despite having quartic and cubic terms in the initial expression, we show that these vanish, leaving us with the same quadratic structure as standard DDP.

In a not too distant future, robots will be a natural part of
daily life in human society, providing assistance in many
areas ranging from clinical applications, education and care
giving, to normal household environments [1]. It is hard to
imagine that all possible tasks can be preprogrammed in such
robots. Robots need to be able to learn, either by themselves
or with the help of human supervision. Additionally, wear and
tear on robots in daily use needs to be automatically compensated
for, which requires a form of continuous self-calibration,
another form of learning. Finally, robots need to react to stochastic
and dynamic environments, i.e., they need to learn
how to optimally adapt to uncertainty and unforeseen
changes. Robot learning is going to be a key ingredient for the
future of autonomous robots.
While robot learning covers a rather large field, from learning
to perceive, to plan, to make decisions, etc., we will focus
this review on topics of learning control, in particular, as it is
concerned with learning control in simulated or actual physical
robots. In general, learning control refers to the process of
acquiring a control strategy for a particular control system and
a particular task by trial and error. Learning control is usually
distinguished from adaptive control [2] in that the learning system
can have rather general optimization objectivesâ??not just,
e.g., minimal tracking errorâ??and is permitted to fail during
the process of learning, while adaptive control emphasizes fast
convergence without failure. Thus, learning control resembles
the way that humans and animals acquire new movement
strategies, while adaptive control is a special case of learning
control that fulfills stringent performance constraints, e.g., as
needed in life-critical systems like airplanes.
Learning control has been an active topic of research for at
least three decades. However, given the lack of working robots
that actually use learning components, more work needs to be
done before robot learning will make it beyond the laboratory
environment. This article will survey some ongoing and past
activities in robot learning to assess where the field stands and
where it is going. We will largely focus on nonwheeled robots
and less on topics of state estimation, as typically explored in
wheeled robots [3]â??6], and we emphasize learning in continuous
state-action spaces rather than discrete state-action spaces [7], [8].
We will illustrate the different topics of robot learning with
examples from our own research with anthropomorphic and
humanoid robots.

We present a control architecture for fast quadruped locomotion over rough terrain. We approach the problem by decomposing
it into many sub-systems, in which we apply state-of-the-art learning, planning, optimization, and control techniques
to achieve robust, fast locomotion. Unique features of our control strategy include: (1) a system that learns optimal
foothold choices from expert demonstration using terrain templates, (2) a body trajectory optimizer based on the Zero-
Moment Point (ZMP) stability criterion, and (3) a floating-base inverse dynamics controller that, in conjunction with force
control, allows for robust, compliant locomotion over unperceived obstacles. We evaluate the performance of our controller
by testing it on the LittleDog quadruped robot, over a wide variety of rough terrains of varying difficulty levels. The
terrain that the robot was tested on includes rocks, logs, steps, barriers, and gaps, with obstacle sizes up to the leg length
of the robot. We demonstrate the generalization ability of this controller by presenting results from testing performed by
an independent external test team on terrain that has never been shown to us.

This paper explores a memory-based approach to robot learning, using memory-based neural networks to learn models of the task to be performed. Steinbuch and Taylor presented neural network designs to explicitly store training data and do nearest neighbor lookup in the early 1960s. In this paper their nearest neighbor network is augmented with a local model network, which fits a local model to a set of nearest neighbors. This network design is equivalent to a statistical approach known as locally weighted regression, in which a local model is formed to answer each query, using a weighted regression in which nearby points (similar experiences) are weighted more than distant points (less relevant experiences). We illustrate this approach by describing how it has been used to enable a robot to learn a difficult juggling task. Keywords: memory-based, robot learning, locally weighted regression, nearest neighbor, local models.

1991

Our goal is to understand the principles of Perception, Action and Learning in autonomous systems that successfully interact with complex environments and to use this understanding to design future systems